About my username. When my daughter Noa was a little baby, she was always intrigued by a label with black and yellow letters on the left side of her baby car. The label read “WARNING”, and warned not to put the baby seat in a certain dangerous position in the car. She spent all day looking at those letters. I guess she was attracted to the colors. My little sister started to call her “Noa Warning”.

Hehe, thanks. I don’t know exactly. I have very strange dreams and sometimes, just before I get a visit from Morpheus, I get really clear and mad images in my head (this is when everyone starts to think I’m insane). I try to play with those dreams and images. I used to draw a lot, but it’s quite difficult for me. I prefer to take a picture of an idea, it has many more details.

I like playing with politically incorrect issues. I do not like repression or religion in general (with all due respect to people of faith). Some of my photos represent my rejection of the Puritan mentality.

I can see beauty in the darkness, but always finding the balance between the aesthetic and the gloomy. I can become very contradictory with my tastes. I can like the corniest things and also the goriest, it’s a good mix. Don’t you think?

3. How long have you been into Lomography?. What made you pick up a lomo/lo-fi camera?

I’ve been into Lomography since about 2009, more or less.

I lived very near to the lomo store in Madrid, but I always walked straight past it. It was always at night and it was closed. I browsed from the outside through the window and i saw a world full of colour and fun. Then I thought, what the hell is Lomography?.

After a while, I read an article in a magazine about the Fisheye No. 2. It had to be mine! I went to the store and bought it. This was the first time I’d gone, and I knew it would not be the last… I said I loved nice things, and believe me, they were all nice!

4. You´re given a chance to create a new camera for Lomography, what it would be?

Well, how about a Photomaton lomo camera (like the ones they still have in Berlin)? That would be fun!

5. Where would you like to travel and shoot to?

So many places!!!! Iceland, Transylvania, Brazil, Louisiana, Colorado, Chile, Tanzania, Jordan and especially Asia. The exotic locations are the most photogenic in my opinion.

Nepal, India, Cambodia, Mongolia… are the best places in the world to shoot.

My next destination will be Thailand, in just one week!

6. Favorite shooting style/technique?

I prefer to look through the viewfinder, I like having a little bit of the control. I would only break the rules with the fisheye. About the technique, I’m still learning from my mistakes little by little, but I love the double exposures, the results are crazy!.

7. Someone shouts at you “your camera is ugly and so are you” What do you do?

I would be an Agfa CT Precisa, because it’s special, difficult to find and never fails you. Wait a minute, I’m describing my ideal man too!

9. Any interesting experience related to Lomography happened lately?

I’ve had many interesting experiences with Lomography. Perhaps the most notable was the publication of an article in a major Spanish newspaper about Lomography, with photos of various spanish lomographers, including me. This made me very excited.

10. What advice can you share with us? A warning perhaps?

Hahahaha. Look at many images in magazines, books, movies…this really helps to inspire and to be more creative. Don’t limit yourself, remember that we set our own constraints.

More Interesting Articles

For lomographer Ana Batrićević, shooting on film is a welcome break from her mostly digital work. With her grandfather's camera, she documents the world around her in nostalgic hues, a process that serves as a reminder of her childhood. Get to know our newcomer of the week in this interview.

This week's featured Lomographer hails from Baguio City, Philippines. As a passionate analogue shooter, she frames the world in soft colors and hazy light leaks which lend a nostalgic atmosphere to her photographs. Get to know our Newcomer of the Week in this brief interview.

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Lomography loves both students and teachers, so we're helping you out with some savings on some photographic school supplies! Get a 35% discount on the Diana F+ Camera, Diana F+ Camera with Flash, Sprocket Rocket, or The Spinner 360°! Check out our microsite to find out more!

Sam Prekop of The Sea and Cake is a meticulous musician, setting up and dismantling instruments and synthesisers to create a unique sound. He is also a keen film photographer who likes to document the everyday, forgotten corners of life.

Fearless traveler and long-time Lomographer Stéphane Heinz (a.k.a. @vicuna) is here to share his memorable stay in the beautiful city of Montreal, Canada. With his own words and images, he walks us through his latestsummer vacation.

We collaborated with incredible Indonesian fashion illustrator Dinda Puspitasari to create a special edition of the Lomo'Instant Automat – and we're giving one away for free! Find out more about this amazing artist and how to win here.

Every photograph is a capsule of reality – or multiple realities, for that matter – freezing time and space in their constantly changing state. 'Multi-Verse', a series by photographer Amy Friend, explores the possibility of parallel universes.

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